6 oraciones con verbs + adverbs + adjetives + nouns + subject + predicate + preposition + articles
Respuestas a la pregunta
Respuesta:
1. The personal pronoun takes the place of a specific or named person or thing. Personal pronouns come in three different cases: nominative, objective, and possessive.
he, she, it, they (nominative)
her, him, you, them (objective)
his, hers, yours, ours, its, theirs (possessive)
2. The reflexive pronoun adds information by pointing back to a noun or another pronoun.
myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.
Students who cheat are only hurting themselves.
3. The intensive pronoun adds emphasis to a noun or pronoun.
myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.
I, myself, am unsure of the procedure.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the reflexive and intensive pronouns in the example sentences above.
4. The demonstrative pronoun points out a specific person, place, or thing.
this, that, these, those, such
This is incredible!
5. The relative pronoun begins a subordinate clause and relates the clause to a word in the main clause.
who, whoever, which, that
The student who studies the hardest usually does the best.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the demonstrative and relative pronouns in the examples above.
6. The interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question. The personal interrogative pronouns come in the same three cases as the personal pronouns.
7. Indefinite pronouns refer to persons, places, or things without specifying for certain which one.
everybody, anybody, somebody, all, each, every, some, none, one
whoever, whomever, whatever (indefinite relative pronouns)
Everyone is wondering if any is left.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the indefinite pronouns in the example sentence above.
Explicación: